White Fright, Jane Dailey
White Fright, Jane Dailey
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White Fright
The Sexual Panic at the Heart of America's Racist History

Author: Jane Dailey

Narrator: Kylah Frye

Unabridged: 10 hr 46 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Basic Books

Published: 11/17/2020


Synopsis

A major new history of the fight for racial equality in America, arguing that fear of black sexuality has undergirded white supremacy from the start.
In White Fright, historian Jane Dailey brilliantly reframes our understanding of the long struggle for African American rights. Those fighting against equality were not motivated only by a sense of innate superiority, as is often supposed, but also by an intense fear of black sexuality.

In this urgent investigation, Dailey examines how white anxiety about interracial sex and marriage found expression in some of the most contentious episodes of American history since Reconstruction: in battles over lynching, in the policing of black troops' behavior overseas during World War II, in the violent outbursts following the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education, and in the tragic story of Emmett Till. The question was finally settled -- as a legal matter -- with the Court's definitive 1967 decision in Loving v. Virginia, which declared interracial marriage a "fundamental freedom." Placing sex at the center of our civil rights history, White Fright offers a bold new take on one of the most confounding threads running through American history.

Reviews

Goodreads review by the overstuffed bookshelf on November 22, 2020

Thank you to NetGalley, Perseus Books and Basic Books for this copy of White Fright by Jane Dailey. White Fright will be the newest book to be assigned reading in Diversity Studies classes this Spring, for good reason. Well-researched and thorough, White Fright takes you through the history of the s......more

Goodreads review by Nuha on January 14, 2021

Thank you to Perseus Books and NetGalley for the Reader's Copy! Now available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Indie Bookstore. While intriguing as a concept, I found Jane Dailey's White Fright to be ultimately essentialistic. Through a series of historical analysis, Dailey serves to build the premise......more

Goodreads review by Anson on April 21, 2022

It is an unusual person who will find this book enjoyable reading, both because it emphasizes the sorts of inhumanity we’d rather not dwell on and because the author has written the book while in academic mode. Dailey provides a clear thesis but not a strong narrative. Chapters are almost independen......more

Goodreads review by Sara on September 26, 2020

"White Fright" by Jane Dailey is a nonfiction work about how white Americans pursuit of continuing to uphold racism centered around their fear of interracial relationships. I learned that white people were often willing to break down racist systems as long as changes did not go so far as to legalize......more

Goodreads review by Dan on December 12, 2020

This is an excellent look at how sexual fears and concerns and miscegenation caused many of the ways in which the nation treated the black community .......more


Quotes

"This indispensable narrative powerfully illuminates how anxieties about 'miscegenation' and interracial marriage shaped and sustained white supremacy for four centuries. Every American should read this book."—Drew Gilpin Faust, author of This Republic of Suffering

"In White Fright historian Jane Dailey skillfully untangles the purposefully snarled concepts of sex, marriage, and politics at the foundation of the White supremacist American political economy that followed Reconstruction. More than a century and a half later, such gut-level concepts underlie our current politics, making White Fright essential reading right now. As Dailey shows, the history of anti-Blackness is White history."
Nell Irvin Painter, author of Southern History Across the Color Line

"To understand the true virulence of white supremacy in America, and to grasp just how hard won the fights against it have been, one must reckon with the extent to which racist laws and actions have always, in fact, been fueled by white obsessions about sex. Jane Dailey's latest, a most powerful recovery of this insidious history, must be read by all."—Heather Ann Thompson, Pulitzer Prize-Winning author of Blood in the Water

"Jane Dailey's peerless contribution is the revelation of how African Americans came to rebut not only the arch segregationists of the Deep South, but also the white moderates who dared to prescribe what Blacks "ought to want"-even after the Nazis copied the laws that such well-to-do whites helped keep in place. A must-read to understand how the right to choose whom to love and marry lost its centuries-old exclusivity."
Nancy MacLean, author of Democracy in Chains